"In that night, that tiny village was erased. The culprits were you—Suna shinobi, preaching of bonds and family while your blades were still wet with the blood of the helpless."
"But what you didn't know… was that a single ember survived the fire."
"I wonder, when you slaughtered those weaker than you, did it ever cross your minds? That you were the butchers? That your 'necessity' was just a cloak for savagery?"
The final words hung in the rain-choked air, a verdict delivered not with rage, but with chilling clarity.
The response was a void. The furious rebuttals, the righteous indignation, died on a thousand lips. The enemy ranks stood in a stunned, suffocating silence. The moral high ground they had claid monts ago crumbled beneath them, revealing the bloody mud it was built upon.
"One year ago… the border… the naless village…" a Suna chunin mumbled, his face pale. He turned to Chiyo, his voice trembling. "Lady Chiyo… we… we did attack villages there. Outside Konoha's formal border. For supplies, for grain… we… we…" He couldn't finish. The mory of torched hos and silent, staring corpses, once filed away as 'mission paraters,' now rose with horrible clarity.
Suna's existence was a struggle against a hungry desert. Food was currency, life itself. The Third Kazekage's reign had brought stability, not prosperity. Buying was slow, expensive. Raiding was fast, efficient. The fertile Land of Fire was a larder. Border hamlets were soft targets. Konoha's guards were spread thin. The villagers were farrs, not fighters. It was simple arithtic.
Kill the witnesses, take the grain, leave. A routine so ingrained it felt like natural law. The dead were foreigners. Their weakening was Konoha's loss, Suna's gain. In this era of hardened borders, such logic was not questioned; it was operational doctrine.
Chiyo listened, the grief for her son now mingled with a colder, more complicated sha. As a quasi-Kage, she had operated on a grander scale—puppets against armies, strategies against nations. The grubby business of village-burning for sacks of rice was beneath her notice, delegated to others. She had heard reports, of course. She had dismissed them as the ugly necessities of a starving village's survival. Indifference. That was her sin. To care only for the macro, for Suna's grand strategy, while turning a blind eye to the micro-level atrocities that fueled it.
Ragnar's revelation wasn't ant to paint Konoha as righteous. In this era, no village's hands were clean. Konoha had its own skeletons, its own raids, its own 'necessary' butcheries in the Land of Rain and beyond. His point was more fundantal: In this hell, everyone is stained. So spare your sermons about bonds and honor. Your morality is a situational luxury.
In the Konoha lines, a similar, uncomfortable reflection took hold. The young shinobi who had cheered Ragnar's power now fell silent. They too were part of this machine. They were in the Land of Rain for 'Konoha's interests'—a polite term for resource denial, territorial expansion, and breaking rival powers. The Second Great War was, at its core, a giant, organized pillage.
Chiyo's voice, when it ca again, was hollow, stripped of its earlier fury. "What… what does that have to do with you? Are you claiming to be that… survivor?"
Ragnar glanced at her, then at the leaden sky, as if drawing strength from the endless gloom. "Yes."
A ripple of stunned disbelief passed through the enemy host.
Impossible.
A year? From a peasant child to… this?
That village had no shinobi! He would have died with the rest!
"HAH!" Ragnar's laugh was short, sharp, and devoid of humor. "Why is it impossible? Is the idea so offensive? That the insect you crushed underfoot could rise and beco the boot that crushes you? That is the reality you crafted."
His eyes found the Suna chunin who had spoken earlier, the one who rembered the raids. A man nad Tojiro.
"You."
FLASH.
A spear of pure, invisible will—Conqueror's Haki concentrated into a lethal psychic lance—shot from Ragnar's eyes. There was no physical movent. No chakra flare.
Tojiro's eyes widened. His jaw went slack. A line of blood trickled from his nostril. Then he simply… folded. Collapsing into the mud like a puppet with its strings cut.
"Tojiro!"
"What happened?!"
"Genjutsu?"
An elite Suna jonin knelt, checking the body. His face turned ashen. "No… not genjutsu. His brain… it's just… dead. Snuffed out."
The casual, effortless execution sent a new kind of chill through the ranks. Death could co without a seal, without a blade, from a re glance.
Chiyo slowly, painfully, laid her son's body down. She summoned two of her sturdiest combat puppets to flank her. When she raised her head again, the grief was still there, but it had been forged into sothing harder: a final, desperate resolve. Her eyes were flint.
"Perhaps you are right," she said, her voice carrying the weight of her years. "Perhaps in this era, shinobi are born into sin. Killing and being killed… we accept this when we take the forehead protector. We do these dark things… for the village. For the next generation. A leader like … is ant to carry the darkness to hell when I go, to bear the karma."
She straightened her back, a small, fierce figure against the golden titan.
"But now!" Her voice rose, cracking with emotion but unwavering. "Now, we of Sunagakure will muster every last drop of our strength! We will kill you! For our fallen! For our future!"
"LADY CHIYO!"
"FOR OUR COMRADES!"
"REVENGE!"
The Suna forces, their spirits broken and reforged into a blade of pure vengeance, roared their response.
On the Iwa flank, Onihira watched, a grudging respect in his eyes for the old warrior's defiance. He raised his hand. "Iwa forces! Coordinate with Suna! Eliminate the Konoha variable! All units, assault!"
The shattered alliance found a new, grim unity: the shared goal of destroying the golden abomination in their midst.
From within the heart of the Buddha, Ragnar observed this resurgence of desperate will. His expression remained one of detached, philosophical contemplation.
"Perhaps the soul's true nature is thirst," he mused, his voice echoing softly. "And revenge is rely the story we tell to justify the blood."
The colossal Golden Buddha shifted. Its massive, golden hands, which had hung at its sides, now rose slowly. They ca together before its chest, not in a fist, but in a precise, sacred gesture—the Gasshō, the mudra of prayer, of greeting, of concentration. The fingers of each hand touched, tips aligned, palms pressed together.
It was the serene, compassionate pose of a Buddha in deep ditation, a symbol of peace and enlightennt.
But on this battlefield, from this being, under Ragnar's cold gaze, the gesture felt like a terrible mockery. A prelude not to salvation, but to a final, divine judgnt.
The hands began to glow with an intense, gathering light.
"Let show you… the price of the world you built."
(End of Chapter)
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